motor
The ventral roots contains motor fibers, responsible for motion, whereas the dorsal sensory fibers, responsible for touch and feeling.
The ventral root of the spinal nerve has the efferent fibers and the dorsal root has the afferent. Prior to joining each other in the spine they each consist of only those fibers.
The dorsal root of spinal nerves contains sensory neuron fibers that transmit sensory information from the body to the spinal cord. In contrast, the ventral root contains motor neuron fibers that carry signals from the spinal cord to the muscles and glands, facilitating movement and responses. Thus, dorsal roots are primarily associated with sensory functions, while ventral roots are linked to motor functions.
The ventral root.
Efferent or Motor
The ventral roots contain motor fibers.
The ventral ramus of a spinal nerve contains both sensory and motor nerve fibers. These fibers innervate the muscles, joints, and skin on the front part of the body.
the ventral root carries motor response
ventral root of a spinal nerve
The autonomic fibers are contained within the ventral (anterior) root of the spinal nerve. These fibers are responsible for carrying signals to and from the autonomic nervous system, which controls involuntary bodily functions.
Yes, the ventral root of a spinal nerve is the efferent motor root, consists of axons of motor neurons. It joins the dorsal root to form a mixed spinal nerve, which consists of afferent sensory neurons (from the dorsal root) and efferent motor neurons (from the ventral root). Therefore severing the ventral root will result in a loss of motor function for the myotome supplied by that spinal nerve.
ventral root